Post on 30-Mar-2018
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Table of Contents
Comparative Analysis of Safety Management Systems _____________________________________ 3
Keil Centre Ltd. - Safety Culture Maturity ® Model _______________________________________________4
Australian Defense Aviation System __________________________________________________________5
Australian Defense Aviation System (continued) ________________________________________________6
Transport Canada _________________________________________________________________________7
Transport Canada (continued) _______________________________________________________________8
Nine Elements of a Successful Safety and Health System © 2005 National Safety Council _______________9
"THE ARCHITECTURE OF SAFETY EXCELLENCE" © Copyright 2000, Larry L. Hansen, L2H Speaking of Safety, Inc. ___________________________________________________________________________________ 10
People Based Safety - E. Scott Geller, Safety Performance Solutions - Alumni Distinguished Professor, Virginia Tech ___________________________________________________________________________ 11
Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA) Challenge (VPP Model) - OSHA Draft revised 4/4/2007 - Occupational Safety & Health Administration, U.S. Department of Labor _________________________ 12
Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA) Challenge (VPP Model) - OSHA Draft revised 4/4/2007 - Occupational Safety & Health Administration, U.S. Department of Labor (continued) _______________ 13
ANSI/AIHA Z10-2005: The American National Standard for Occupational Health and Safety Management Systems _______________________________________________________________________________ 14
Health & Safety Management System OHSAS 18001 ___________________________________________ 15
ILO-OSH 2001 International Labour Organization’s Guidelines on Occupational Health and Safety Management Systems ___________________________________________________________________ 16
ISO 14000 Environmental Management System (EMS) - American National Standards Institute (ANSI) __ 17
Values-Driven Safety (Safety is a Social or Cultural Issue) - Copyright 1996, Don Eckenfelder, Profit Protection Consultants, Inc. _______________________________________________________________ 18
Statistical Process Control - Motorola Inc. ____________________________________________________ 19
Page 3
Comparative Analysis of Safety Management Systems
Leadership: An effective leader must unite followers to a shared vision that offers true value, integrity,
and trust to transform and improve an organization and society at large. (source: www.bambooweb.com)
Management: Management characterizes the process of leading and directing all or part of an
organization, often a business one, through the deployment and manipulation of resources (human,
financial, material, intellectual or intangible). One can also think of management functionally: as the
action in measuring a quantity on a regular basis and adjusting an initial plan and the actions taken to
reach one's intended goal. This applies even in situations where planning does not take place. Situational
management may precede and subsume purposive management. (source: www.bambooweb.com)
Employee Relations: Employee Relations refers to the characteristics of people understanding their role
in the Organization, with two-way open communications and managers ability to effectively relate to
inspire, motivate, and leverage the talents of the employees within the organization to achieve
organizational goals.
Measurement: Measurement is the determination of the size or magnitude of something. Measurement
is not limited to physical quantities, but can extend to quantifying almost any imaginable thing such as
degree of uncertainty, worker confidence. (source: www.bambooweb.com)
Safety Culture : Safety Culture refers to the product of individual and group values, attitudes,
perceptions, competencies, and patterns of behavior that determine commitment to, and the style and
proficiency of, an organization's health and safety management. Organizations with a positive safety
culture are characterized by communications founded on mutual trust, by shared perceptions of the
importance of safety and by the efficacy of preventive measures. (source: The Advisory Committee on the Safety
of Nuclear Installations (ACSNI)1993, p23).
Core Element Comparisons
Leadership at the Top
CEO Leader Executive Team
Top 12 Managers Operations Leadership in Transition
VP Responsible
Management System That Works
“Trust but Verify” Best Safety Practices
Bi-Monthly Reporting to Top Management OHSAS, CHSEA, OSHA Standards &
Certifications
Behavioral
Confidence by all in Company Value
Operations Accountability Public Report
Accountability Requirements Broad Use of Goals
Financial Incentives High Profile VPP Participation
Rewards/Recognitions
Performance Monitoring and Feedback
Internal & External Audits
Real Time Performance Data
Focused Staff Follow-up
Assessment Program
Source: Driving Toward “0”
Best Practices in Corporate Health and Safety, R-1334-03-RR,
The Conference Board. http://www.conference-board.org
Page 4
Keil Centre Ltd. - Safety Culture Maturity ® Model
The safety culture maturity model ® presented refers to organizational behaviors; NOT safety management
systems. A positive safety culture is the product of effective safety management. As part of a project sponsored by
the United Kingdom offshore oil industry and the Health and Safety Executive, The Keil Centre developed the
Safety Culture Maturity® Model, providing a structured safety culture improvement process. The Safety Culture
Maturity® Model assists organizations to identify their current level of safety culture, and develop level-specific
improvement actions. The focus of improvement actions differs, depending upon the existing level. The Model is
set out in stages. Organizations progress sequentially though the five levels. Growth in Safety Culture Maturity®
normally takes one to two years per level, and collectively five to ten years for an organization to achieve peak
performance, assuming they start at Level 1 and maintain a sustained and well-resourced effort. Safety Culture
Maturity is a Registered Trade Mark of The Keil Centre Ltd. Copyright The Keil Centre, 1999
1 2 3 4 5
Emerging Managing Involving Cooperating
Continually
Improving
Develop Management
Commitment
Realize the importance of frontline
staff and develop personal
responsibility
Engage all staff to develop
cooperation and commitment to
improving safety
Develop consistency and
fight complacency
Safety Culture Maturity ® Element Leadership Management Employee Relations Measurement
Visible Management Commitment X
Safety Communication X X
Production versus Safety X X
Learning Organization X X X
Health and Safety Resources X
Participation in Safety X X
Risk-taking Behavior X X
Trust between Management and Frontline Staff X X
Industrial Relations and Job Satisfaction X
Competency X X
Page 5
Australian Defense Aviation System
The specific goals of the Defense Aviation Safety Management System (ASMS) to accomplish this purpose are
the:
1. Preservation of the human and materiel resources of Defense aviation in order to maintain capability, improve
quality and enhance readiness to perform the organization’s mission(s)
2. Reduction in the rate of aviation accidents and serious incidents resulting from human, organizational and
systemic deficiencies to zero
3. Establishment and maintenance of an effective hazard identification, reporting, investigation and management
system, which eliminates, or reduces to an acceptable level, aviation risks within Defense aviation
4. Establishment and maintenance of a generative safety culture
1 2 3 4
Genuine Command
Commitment
Generative Safety Culture Defined Safety Organization
Structure
Communication
Safety recognized as a priority
Command committed to improving
Appropriate allocation of resources
Trained and qualified staff
Personnel aware of: orders, instructions, procedures
High level of awareness
Effective risk management process
Promote stds of excellence:
o Professionalism,
o Innovation
o Loyalty
o Integrity - adherence to codes.
Commanders should:
o Lead by example
o Allocate adequate resources
o Acknowledge concerns &
suggestions
o Give feedback on decisions
Actively measure:
o Safety climate
o Behaviors
o SMS
Measure perceptions:
o Integrity
o Trust
o Morale
o Quality
o Leadership
Committee purpose: inform commander promote interest
Forum for: viewpoints policy
objectives eliminate/mitigate safety hazards
Policy documentation
Review boards/working groups
Surveys
Audits
Safety stand-downs
Open reporting mechanisms
Confidential reporting
Activity briefings/de-briefings
Face to face discussions
Visits and liaisons
Safety information
Communication strategy
Page 6
Australian Defense Aviation System (continued)
5 6 7 8
Documented Safety Policy Training & Education Risk Management Hazard Reporting &
Tracking
Group policy: a safety
o Mgmt system culture - open
reporting hazard
o Id process risk
o Management target - zero accidents
Personnel policy: adequate training awareness risk
management
Training:
o Orientation
o Postgraduate
o Skill specialization
o Contractor
o Safety staff
o Overseas
o Domestic
o Conferences
o Websites
Recognition program
Establish the context
Identify risks
Analyze risks
Evaluate risks
Treat risks
Communication & consultation
Monitoring & review
5-m model for assessment
Hazard identification
Risk control strategies
Risk control tools
Risk decision making
Hazard reporting
Occurrence reporting:
o Event
o Incident
o Accident
o Serious accident
Hazard review board
Tracking
Reports
Hazard identification
Perception of a hazard
9 10 11 12
Investigation Emergency Response Survey & Audit ASMS Review
Analysis
Findings
Contributing factors
Defenses
Risk management
Actions & recommendations
Standard plan framework
Standard terminology
Facility names
Promulgate authority
Planning committee
Emergency plan context
Define any problems
Set planning objectives
Design & apply the
management structure
Determine roles
Determine responsibilities
Analyze resources
Develop emergency systems
Document response plan
Test the plan
Review the plan
Safety survey purpose:
o Assess the SMS
o Recommendations for improvement
o Measure culture
o Improve the quality
Quality mgmt. System:
o Identify positive impacts
o Identify hazards
o Risk mitigation strategies
o Facilitate safety education
o Transfer new information
o Raise safety awareness
Mgmt. System audits:
o Ensure compliance
o Check standards & quality of
documentation
o Improve the QMS
Continuous improvement
cycle:
o Safety policy planning
o Implementation
o Measure & evaluate
o Management review
Page 7
Transport Canada
A safety management system is a businesslike approach to safety. It is a systematic, explicit and comprehensive
process for managing safety risks. As with all management systems, a safety management system provides for
goal setting, planning, and measuring performance. A safety management system is woven into the fabric of an
organization. It becomes part of the culture, the way people do their jobs. The organizational structures and
activities that make up a safety management system are found throughout an organization. Every employee
contributes to the safety health of the organization. In larger organizations, safety management activity will be
more visible in some departments than in others, but the system must be integrated into “the way things are done”
throughout the establishment. This will be achieved by the implementation and continuing support of a coherent
safety policy which leads to well designed procedures.
1 2 3 4
Senior Management
Commitment
Safety Policy Safety Information Establishing Safety as a
Core Value
Expressed as direction
Allocates responsibilities
Holds people accountable
Commitment & objectives
Performance goals & review
Clear statements of responsibility
Accountabilities converge at top
Ensure compliance w/
regulations
Adequate knowledge & skills
Compatibility or integration
With other management
systems
Safety goals
Evaluation of progress
Accident/incident records
Investigation findings
Corrective actions
Concerns raised by
Employees/resultant action
Safety review & actions
Records of safety initiatives
Safety integral to mgmt. Plan
Set safety goals
Hold managers & employees accountable
Achieve goals
Establish deadlines
Part of normal business
Part of normal job
In acquisition process
5 6 7 8
Setting Safety Goals Hazard Identification & Risk
Management
Establishing a Safety Reporting
System
Safety Audit & Assessment
Identify & eliminate or control
hazards
Risk management
Identify:
o Systemic weaknesses
o Accident precursors
Eliminate or mitigate them
During implementation
Regular intervals afterwards
Major operational changes
When changes are planned
If organization is:
o Undergoing rapid change
o Changing services new
o Equipment/procedures key
o Personnel change
Employees:
o Report hazards
o Report concerns
o Trust & use system
Staff know: how to report
Reports are: acknowledged analyzed resolved
Includes contractor activities
Are staff following procedures?
If not? Why?
Audits & assessments are
conducted regularly
Page 8
Transport Canada (continued)
9 10 11 12
Accident & Incident
Reporting & Investigation
Safety Orientation &
Recurrent Training
Emergency Response Plan Documentation
Every accident/incident is:
o Reported
o Investigated
o Analyzed
o What happened
o Why it happened
o How it happened
Responsible manager acts on
findings
New employee training:
o How safety is managed
o Company philosophy
o Policies
o Procedures
o Practices
Employee training:
o Each discipline
o Refresher/retrainer
Checklists & contact info
Regularly updated
Exercised to ensure
Adequacy & readiness
After plan is adopted:
o Staff are briefed
o Staff receive training
o In procedures
o Poc has plan on desk
Policy statement
Reporting chain
Key personnel
Responsibilities
Identifies processes:
o Hazard identification
o Risk management
o Safety reporting
o Audit/review
Page 9
Nine Elements of a Successful Safety and Health System © 2005 National Safety Council
A safety management system is an organized and structured means of ensuring that an organization (or a defined
part of it) is capable of achieving and maintaining high standards of safety performance. A comprehensive safety
and health system should be proactive and preventive. It should be an integrated system that involves everyone in
the company, starting with a solid commitment from top management. It should include a formal method of
measuring and evaluating individual and organizational safety performance with an emphasis on improving safety
performance within the system. In creating a safety management system, a company’s management system must
first clarify and establish its safety and health philosophy, beliefs, and vision or mission. Through these efforts, a
culture that promotes safety and health is established. A comprehensive safety management system should give
equal consideration to the administrative, operational and technical, and cultural issues of safety and health.
Administrative - Management
1 2 3
Management Leadership & Commitment Organization Communications & System
Documentation
Assessments, Audits & Continuous
Improvement
Clear policy
Goals & objectives
Performance measures
Resources
Accountability
Integrated
Two-way communication
Record keeping
Documentation
Compliance to policy
& procedure
Audits
Assessments at all levels
Action plans
Technical - Operational
4 5 6
Hazard Recognition, Evaluation &
Control
Workplace Design & Engineering Workplace Design & Engineering
Ergonomic design
Regulations & standards
Design
Policies
Ergonomic design
Regulations & standards
Design
Policies
Training
Communications
Behavior auditing
Recognition & reward
Observations
Cultural - Behavioral
7 8 9
Employee Involvement Motivation, Behavior & Attitudes Training & Orientation
Training
Communications
Behavior auditing
Recognition & reward
Observations
Organization Behavior Management (OBM)
Reinforcement & feedback
Total Quality Management (TQM)
Attitude adjustment methods
Systematic
Training plan
Management training
Orientation program
Page 10
"THE ARCHITECTURE OF SAFETY EXCELLENCE" © Copyright 2000, Larry L. Hansen, L2H Speaking of Safety, Inc.
Peak safety performance is the result of multiple strategies designed and applied across a broad spectrum of issues
and risk factors within an organization. Safety excellence is the outcome of a strategy continuum – one that
addresses a company’s regulatory, technical, engineering, organizational, behavioral, managerial and cultural loss
sources. Safety excellence is a function of individual and organizational behavior, both of which are a function of
organizational culture – that force which determines what everyone does to drive safety through the process. For
the past 70 years, American business has focused almost exclusively on the “E” in this equation – engineering,
education and enforcement. In large part, safety professionals have mastered these areas. Now it is time to work
on the building blocks of culture, organizational strategy, performance leadership and organizational behavior –
the true accident sources.
Operational Strategies of a Safety Program
1 2 3
Education Enforcement Engineering “Awareness”
Policies
Procedures
Meetings
Training
Disciplinary policies
“Improving”
Facility inspections
Compliance audits
Walkthroughs
Program minimum
Requirements
Citations, fines, penalties
“Engineering”
Automation
Ergonomics
Work methods
Safeguarding
Process design
Safety success = CEOu, where C = culture; E = elements of safety; O = organization and u = you
4 5 6 7
Behavioral Strategy Organization Leadership Cultural Strategy “Actions of All”
Human resources
Engineers
Operations
Legal
Risk management
Behave safely
“Structure”
Organizational design
Job descriptions
Responsibilities
Communications
Performance measurement
Rewards systems
“Managing People”
Encourage
Reward
Participative
Teaming
Reinforcing
“Culture”
Vision & mission building
Values clarification
High-visibility executive
Involvement
Note: The 'Operational Strategies' of Education, Enforcement and Engineering…working left to right and the
'Organizational Strategies' of Culture, Leadership, and Organization, working right to left - in concert, influence
'Behavior'…the ultimate event(s) prior to incident...and potential injury.
Page 11
People Based Safety - E. Scott Geller, Safety Performance Solutions - Alumni Distinguished Professor, Virginia Tech
“People-Based Safety” (PBS) strategically integrates the best of behavior-based and person-based safety in order
to enrich the culture in which people work — improving job satisfaction, work quality and production,
interpersonal relationships, and occupational safety and health.
1 2 3 4
Observable Behavior External/Internal Factors Activators & Motivate Focus on Positive
Consequences “Think To Act Differently”
What people do
Analyzes why
Intervention strategy
“Improve Behavior”
Improve job satisfaction
Work quality & production
Interpersonal relationship
Occupation Safety & Health
“ABC’s”
Activator, behavior, &
consequence
Design interventions for
Improving behavior at
Individual, group, &
Organizational levels
"Motivate Behavior"
Working to achieve success
Avoid reactive behavior
Using total recordable
Injury rates
5 6 7
Scientific Method Improve
Intervention
Theory to Integrate
Information
Consider Internal Feeling &
Attitudes of Others “DO IT”
D = define target action & increase or decrease
O = observe, set goals
I = intervene T = test impact, record
Intervention techniques
Situation
Individual
Work practice
Leadership empathy & sensitivity to message delivered
Page 12
Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA) Challenge (VPP Model) - OSHA Draft revised 4/4/2007 - Occupational Safety & Health Administration, U.S. Department of Labor
The OSHA Challenge Pilot uses the Voluntary Protection Programs (VPP) model of safety and health program
management to guide employers in the development and improvement of workplace safety and health
management systems (SHMS), with the goal of improving performance and ultimately qualifying for VPP
recognition and participation. Challenge participants follow a 3-stage roadmap of progressively more
comprehensive actions, documentation, and results. At each stage, they address the four major elements of the
VPP model:
1. Management leadership and employee involvement. Management accepts responsibility for, and commits to
implement and operate (including allocation of necessary resources), an effective occupational safety and health
program that protects all employees and contractors working at the site. Employees agree to participate in the
program and work with management to ensure a safe and healthful workplace. Annual SHMS self-evaluations are
performed, actions items identified and SHMS adjustments made to foster continual improvement.
2. Worksite Analysis. Management of workplace. safety and health must begin with a thorough understanding of
all hazardous situations to which employees may be exposed, plus the ability to recognize hazards as they arise;
3. Hazard Prevention and Control. Hazards identified during the hazard analysis process must be eliminated or
controlled by developing and implementing appropriate systems; and
4. Safety and Health Training. All employees must understand the hazards to which they may be exposed and
how to prevent harm to themselves and others. Effective training ensures safety and health personnel, managers,
and employees acquire knowledge and skills they need to perform their work free of harm.
1a 1b 1c
Management Leadership & Employee Involvement
management commitment employee involvement contractor employee coverage
Mission & policy statements
Goals & objectives
Leadership by example
Open communications
Between managers & employees
Adequate resources
Responsibility, authority & accountability
Employees notified of results of complaints,
Investigations, etc.
Annual self-evaluation
Continual improvement
Employee safety & health perception survey
Meaningful employee
Involvement in the SHMS, such as:
o Investigations
o Hazard analysis
o Planning
Employee rights intact
“Ownership” of SHMS
Documented oversight & management system
Adherence to rules
Same level of protection as regular employees
Contractor selection process
Encourage contractors to develop & operate
effective SHMS
Track correction of hazards
Stop work policy
Page 13
Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA) Challenge (VPP Model) - OSHA Draft revised 4/4/2007 - Occupational Safety & Health Administration, U.S. Department of Labor (continued)
2 3 4
Worksite Analysis Hazard Prevention & Control Safety & Health Training
Baseline safety & industrial hygiene (IH) analysis
Data trend analysis
Hazard analysis of routine jobs, tasks, and
processes
Hazard analysis of significant changes
Pre-use analysis
Change analysis
Access to certified professional resources
Hazard elimination & control methods
Hierarchy of controls: engineering, administrative, work practice, personal
protective equipment (PPE)
Documented system for hazard correction &
tracking
Emergency preparedness & response
IH program
Routine self-inspections
Employee hazard reporting system
Investigation of hazards & near misses
Equitable & clearly communicated
Disciplinary system
Orientation for all employees, including contractors
Training for all workers appropriate to level of
responsibility and exposure to hazards
Training for specific groups of workers
Training for non-routine tasks
Change of job training
Page 14
ANSI/AIHA Z10-2005: The American National Standard for Occupational Health and Safety Management Systems
The American National Standard for Occupational Health and Safety Management Systems (ANSI/AIHA Z10-
2005) is a voluntary consensus standard on occupational health and safety management systems. It uses
recognized management system principles in order to be compatible with quality and environmental management
standards such as the ISO 9000 and ISO 14000 series. The standard draws from approaches used by the
International Labor Organization’s (ILO) guidelines on Occupational Health and Safety Management Systems
and from systems in use in organizations in the United States. This compatibility encourages integration of the
standard’s requirements into other business management systems in order to enhance overall organizational
performance (AIHA, 2005).
The purpose of the standard is to provide organizations an effective tool for continual improvement of their
occupational health and safety performance. The ANSI/AIHA Z10-2005 standard is a set of interrelated elements
that establish or support health and safety policy and objectives, and mechanisms to achieve those objectives in
order to continually improve occupational safety and health (AIHA, 2005).
3.0 Policy 4.0 Planning 5.0 Implementation &
Operation
6.0 Evaluation &
Corrective Action
7.0 Management
Review
PPLLAANN DDOO CCHHEECCKK AACCTT
3.1 Management Leadership 3.1.1 Occupational Health and Safety Management System 3.1.2 OHS Policy 3.1.3 Responsibility and Authority 3.2 Employee Participation
4.1 Initial and Ongoing Reviews 4.1.1 Initial Reviews 4.1.2 Ongoing Reviews 4.2 Assessment and Prioritization 4.3 Objectives 4.4 Implementation Plans and Allocation of Resources
5.1 OHSMS Operational Elements 5.1.1 Hierarchy of Controls 5.1.2 Design Review and Management of Change 5.1.3 Procurement 5.1.4 Contractors 5.1.5 Emergency Preparedness 5.2 Education, Training, Awareness, and Competence 5.3 Communications 5.4 Document and Record Process
6.1 Monitoring, Measurement, and Assessments 6.2 Incident Investigation 6.3 Audits 6.4 Corrective and Preventive Actions 6.5 Feedback to the Planning Process
7.1 Management Review Process 7.2 Management Review Outcomes and Follow-up
Page 15
Health & Safety Management System OHSAS 18001
OHSAS 18001 is an internationally accepted specification that defines the requirements for establishing,
implementing and operating an OHSMS. The specification was developed with the assistance of a number of
international standards and certification bodies. OHSAS 18001 fills a void, in that there is currently no
international ISO standard suitable for independent third-party certification. OHSAS 18001 was designed to be
compatible with ISO 9001 and ISO 14001. This will be helpful if you want to design, implement and operate an
integrated quality, environmental and occupational health and safety management system. The benefits of an
OHSMS include:
Reductions in staff absence
Reductions in claims against the organization
Reductions in adverse publicity
Improved insurance liability rating may equal lower insurance premiums
Improved productivity
A positive response from customers who want to deal with an organization with a proven health and safety
track record.
1 2 3 4 5
Policy Planning Implementation &
Operation
Checking & Corrective
Action
Management Review
Policy statement
supported & authorized
by top management
Hazard identification
Risk assessment
Risk control
Objectives to achieve
Policy
Specific and
measureable legal & other requirements
Plans that define:
o What will be done
o Who will do what
o And by when
Define roles,
responsibilities and authorities of staff
Top mgmt.
Representative
Provide appropriate
training
Int. & ext.
Communication
Develop process &
procedures
Control OHSMS documentation
Manage risk control
Record maintenance
Establish, maintain & test a process
Procedures for
handling &
investigating
accidents, incidents & non-conformities
Eliminate actual or potential cause
Assess system
suitability & effectiveness
"Audits"
Top mgmt. Meet periodically
Facilitate continual
improvement
Review policy &
performance against
objectives
Reviews determine
suitability, adequacy,
and effectiveness of
management system
Reviews focus on
improvement &
customer satisfaction
Page 16
ILO-OSH 2001 International Labour Organization’s Guidelines on Occupational Health and Safety Management Systems
The International Labour Organization’s Guidelines on Occupational Safety and Health Management Systems
(ILO-OSH 2001) was developed according to internationally agreed principles defined by the ILO's tripartite
constituents. This tripartite approach provides the strength, flexibility, and appropriate basis for the development
of a sustainable safety culture in the organization. The ILO has therefore developed voluntary guidelines on OSH
management systems which reflect ILO values and instruments relevant to the protection of workers' safety and
health (ILO, 2001).
Objects (ILO, 2001)
These guidelines should contribute to the protection of workers from hazards and to the elimination of work-
related injuries, ill health, diseases, incidents, and deaths. At national level, the guidelines should:
1. Be used to establish a national framework for OSH management systems, preferably supported by national
laws and regulations;
2. Provide guidance for the development of voluntary arrangements to strengthen compliance with regulations
and standards leading to continual improvement in OSH performance; and
3. Provide guidance on the development of both national and tailored guidelines on OSH management systems
to respond appropriately to the real needs of organizations, according to their size and the nature of their
activities.
At the level of the organization, the guidelines are intended to:
1. Provide guidance regarding the integration of OSH management system elements in the organization as a
component of policy and management arrangements; and
2. Motivate all members of the organization, particularly employers, owners, managerial staff, workers and their
representatives, in applying appropriate OSH management principles and methods to continually improve OSH
performance.
Policy Organizing Planning &
Implementation
Evaluation Action for
Improvement ♦ Occupational safety and
health policy
♦ Worker participation
♦ Responsibility and accountability
♦ Competence and training
♦ Occupational safety and health management
system documentation
♦ Communication
♦ Initial review ♦ System planning,
development, and
implementation ♦ Occupational safety and
health objectives
♦ Hazard prevention
♦ Performance monitoring and measurement
♦ Incident investigation
♦ Audit ♦ Management review
♦ Preventive and corrective action
♦ Continual improvement
Page 17
ISO 14000 Environmental Management System (EMS) - American National Standards Institute (ANSI)
The ISO 14000 family is primarily concerned with "environmental management". This means what the
organization does to minimize harmful effects on the environment caused by its activities, and to achieve
continual improvement of its environmental performance. There are five major elements of the standard; policy,
planning, implementation and operation, checking and corrective action, and management review commonly
referred to as plan, do, check, act. These elements interact with each other to form the framework of an integrated,
systematic approach to environmental management, with the ultimate result being continual improvement of the
overall system. Copies of all ISO standards can be purchased from the American National Standards Institute
(ANSI), 25 West 43rd St., NY,NY 10036; phone: 212-642-4900 e-mail info@ansi.org
http://www.webstore.ansi.org/ansidocstore/
1 2 3 4 5
Policy Planning Implementation &
Operation
Checking &
Corrective Action
Management
Review
Pollution prevention
Top management
Commitment continual
improvement
Program achieving objectives
Objectives & targets
Legal & other requirements
Environmental aspects & impacts
Significant aspects
Emergency preparedness & response
Operational control
Document control
Ems documentation
Communication
Training, awareness,
competence
Structure & responsibility
Ems audit
Records
Nonconformance,
corrective & preventative action
Monitoring & measurement
Page 18
Values-Driven Safety (Safety is a Social or Cultural Issue) - Copyright 1996, Don Eckenfelder, Profit Protection Consultants, Inc.
Organizational attitude will determine whether safety initiatives will be successful. The attitude flows directly
from the culture and:
1. Culture predicts performance.
2. Culture can be measured and managed.
3. Nothing is more important than getting the culture right.
This knowledge – together with the “tools” to act on it and the resolve to get on with it – can serve as a catalyst
for every existing safety effort. It will overcome the deficiencies in behavior-based safety (BBS) and magnify its
benefits.
1 2 3 4
Performance Map Bridge Metaphor Safety Culture Barometer Exercises for Improvement
"Causation Diagram"
Create loss resistance
Facilitate loss prevention
Work on beliefs and values
Creating organizational culture
"Strong Bridge"
Deal with culture directly
Change it consciously
Change it strategically
"Maturity Grid"
"Measurement tool"
Organization customized
Measurement device
Do It For The Right Reason
Routine exercises
14 attributes that are invariably resident in organizations that are loss resistant:
1. Each employee takes responsibility for safety.
2. Safety is integrated into the management process.
3. The presence of the full-time safety professional is limited.
4. There is an off-the-job safety effort.
5. Safety and other training are seamlessly integrated.
6. Compliance comes naturally.
7. Programs and technical processes have history and occur naturally
8. There is a bias against gimmicks.
9. Leadership always sets the example; safety is never taken lightly.
10. There is a recognizable safety culture.
11. The focus is more on process than statistics.
12. Negative findings are treated expeditiously.
13. The few safety professionals have stature.
14. Safety is seen as a competitive edge...not overhead.
The beliefs and values, worded as imperatives that will lead to the acquisition of the 14 attributes, are:
1. Do it for the right reasons.
2. See it as part of the whole.
3. Recognize there is no end.
4. First, it is a people business; things are a distant second.
5. Put the right person in charge.
6. Use a yardstick everyone can read.
7. Sell benefits...and they are many.
8. Never settle for second best.
9. Be guided by logic, not emotion.
10. Empower others rather than seeking after support.
Page 19
Statistical Process Control - Motorola Inc.
The goal or purpose of Six Sigma is to reduce variation and eliminate defects so that virtually all products or
services meet or exceed customer expectations. Six Sigma is described both as a capability and as a methodology.
As a capability, Six Sigma is defined as 3.4 defects per million opportunities in a process. As a methodology, Six
Sigma provides the guidelines and tools to significantly and permanently improve processes and products. There
are three basic elements to the Six Sigma methodology: process improvement, process design/re-design, and
product design/re-design. Six Sigma was developed by Motorola in the 1980s but has its roots in Statistical
Process Control (SPC), which first appeared in the 1920s.
1 2 3
Process Improvement Process Design/Re-design Process Design/Re-design
DEFINE process identify goals for process
consider customer requirements
MEASURE process categorize key
characteristics verify measurement systems collect data
ANALYZE data translate data into information
identify causes of defects & problems
IMPROVE process develop solutions analyze
results of changes determine if changes are beneficial
CONTROL monitor process to assure no
unexpected changes occur
DEFINE process identify goals for process
consider customer requirements develop
performance requirements that MATCH goals
ANALYZE performance requirements develop outline design for new process detailed DESIGN
for new process & IMPLEMENT
VERIFY new process performs as required
introduce controls to ensure continued performance
DEFINE processes key customer requirements
key performance indicators
MEASURE performance against requirements
and key performance indicators
ANALYZE data to enhance measures refine process management mechanisms
CONTROL monitor process inputs process
operation process outputs